Thoracic Anatomy & Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

Typical Vertebrae

A

T2-T9

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2
Q

Atypical Vertebrae

A

T1, T10-T12

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3
Q

Rule of “Threes”

A
T1-T3 - Same level
T4-T6 - Half level below
T7-T9 - One whole level below
T10 - One whole level below
T11 - Half level below
T12 - Same level
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4
Q

Costovertebral Joint

A

Ribs 2-10 articulate with a vertebral body

Rib head attaches to concavity of vertebral body margins and IVD

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5
Q

Costotransverse Joint

A

T1-T10 articulation with a rib and transverse process

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6
Q

Most Common MOI for T Spine

A

Fall or collision

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7
Q

T Spine Pain Referral

A

In and around chest wall

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8
Q

T Spine Disc Lesions

A

More common than previously thought but less common than in lumbar spine

Blow to rib may disrupt Thoracic IVD

More commonly in lower T spine (WB, posteriorly directred force)

Most common at T/L junction

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9
Q

T Spine Disc Lesion Referral Patterns

A

Lower T Spine - pn referral to abdomen and iliac crest

Upper T Spine - into upper extremeties

Spinal dura (most likely at T6) - vague referral pattern up and down T spine

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10
Q

Costochondritis

A

Rib inflammation @ sternum - MOI MVA, pneumonia

T spine disc lesion mimicer

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11
Q

Facet Joint Dysfunction

A

Common MOI - MVA (seat belt)

Localized sharp pain unilaterally

Dull ache in chronic stages

Most likely closing dysfunction

Acute - pn coughing, sneezing, breathing

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12
Q

Facet Joint Dysfunction Referred Pain

A

Referred pain possible but no neuro sx - more likely proximally (back) than distally (sternum)

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13
Q

T Spine Ligamentous Injuries

A

Vague, ill defined sx; no distal sx or neuro sx

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14
Q

Rib Cage Injuries

A

Rib fx very pnful

Breathing may increase pn

Tender to palpation

Possible hematoma

Exam: tap with reflex hammer or use tuning fork

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15
Q

T Spine Muscle Injuries

A

Uncommon in T Spine

Muscle spasms and trigger points common in upper T spine - possible compression of posterior primary rami

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16
Q

T4 Syndrome Etiology

A

Unknown

May be autonomic or mechanical involving ZPJ

17
Q

T4 Syndrome

A

Dull aching, sx covering whole hand, +/- neuro sx, non-dermatomal referral pattern

Sx typically unilateral

Sx with springing

AKA “Glove Syndrome”

18
Q

Thoracic Hypomobility

A

Common

Sudden onset (also sedentary -> active lifestyle)

Aggravated by movement breathing, coughing, sneezing

Often unilateral pn at CT joint (slightly off midline) that radiates

Chest wall pn

Manual therapy and therex to prevent recurrence

19
Q

Scheuermann’s Disease

A

Adolescents

End plate failure - IVD merges with bone (?) and disc height decreases

Spontaneously resolving, postural deformity remains

20
Q

Pain Referral to T Spine from C Spine

A

Cervical disc lesions - pn to T spine and medial borders of scapula (cloward areas); common after whiplash

Facet joints - sx locally and unilaterally; suprascapular and thoracic areas

21
Q

T/F - With a thoracic nerve root lesion, true nerve root pain will be felt more proximally (in the back) than distally ( in the front near the sternum)

A

False! With a nerve root lesion, distal pain (anterior, next to sternum) is greater than proximal pain (in the back)

22
Q

Will hard neurological signs be present with a thoracic nerve root lesion?

A

Not typically, with compression of the nerve root numbness and tingling will commonly be felt in a belt- like distribution

23
Q

What is commonly the least mobile vertebra in the thoracic spine?

A

T6

24
Q

T/F in facet joint dysfunction the pain is referred in the nerve root distribution and the pain is typically more intense distally- in the front near the sternum rather than proximally - in the back

A

FALSE- pain may be referred in the nerve root distribution, however, pain will be more intense at the site of dysfunction (proximally in the back) than distally near the sternum

25
Q

Where is pain typically referred in the thoracic spine when it originates in the cervical spine?

A

Typically referred to the medial borders of the scapula in “Clowards” areas

26
Q

Identify each of the 4 clowards areas and the nerve root that refers to that area.

A
  1. C3- refers midline at the CT junction
  2. C4- refers midline at the level of the spine of the scapula
  3. C5- refers midline at the middle of the scapula
  4. C6 - refers midline at the level of the inferior angle of the scapula
27
Q

T Spine Injury Classifications

A
  • Gradual arthritic disorders
  • Postural
  • Acute, traumatic (most common)
  • C spine referral
  • Visceral
28
Q

T Spine Facet Joints

A
  • Upper segments 45-60 degree incline (like C spine)

- Middle segments 90 degrees

29
Q

Costotransverse Ligament

A

Neck of rib to transverse process at same level

30
Q

Superior costotransverse ligament

A

Lower border of superior transverse process to upper rib and neck

31
Q

Lateral costotransverse ligament

A

Tip of transverse process to adjacent rib

32
Q

T4 syndrome etiology

A

Unknown! Possible autonomic syndrome or ZPJ issue

33
Q

T spine fracture

A

Compression fx most common in T spine

34
Q

Vertebroplasty vs. kyhoplasty

A

Vertebro: injection of cement mixture to strengthen weakened vertebrae (no correction of deformity)

Kypho: Uses a balloon to push bone back to normal height before cement mixture injection (correction of deformity)